Shell has no intention of investing in renewable technologies such as wind, solar, and hydro power since these are not commercial, stated the Anglo-Dutch oil company today. This company has a plan to make more investments in biofuels, which carry the blame for the escalation in the cost of food, and the destruction of our forests, as the environmentalists state. The company affirmed that it would focus on pursuing other cleaner strategies of getting fuels, like carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) technology. It was hoping to use CCS to reduce emissions from Shell’s questionable and energy-intensive oil sands projects in north Canada.
It was declared by the company that no attractive investment opportunities were offered by alternative technologies, such as the RV solar panel. Linda Cook, Shell’s executive director of gas and power, declared: If there are not investment opportunities which vie with other projects we cannot put cash into it.
Shell claimed that biofuels suited its fundamental commerce of providing fuels, logistics, trading, and branding.
Cook also said: “It now seems as if biofuels are one alternative closest to what we offer in Shell. Solar and Wind power are fine, however, everyone will continue to investigate other prospects in which to add to their investment portfolios, even though there are other markets with big packages. The increasing of its dividend payments this year to $10bn, or about 5%, was also confirmed by the company. Friends of the Earth condemned Shell for halting support in alternatives like wind for biofuels.
“Shell is supporting the wrong party in terms of renewable energy biofuels that lead to more emissions than the gas and diesel they displace,” the campaign group clarified. “Shell is at least being a bit more truthful about the fact they seem to be a fossil fuel company. It saw the constraints of the green wash it was putting out some years ago.”. Shell has about 550 MW of wind farm capacity around the planet, enough to power a town the size of Sheffield when the wind blows. Last annum, it quit the 1000MW London Array Project, the cooperation that intended to construct what would be the world’s largest offshore wind farm in the Thames Estuary. The required 3 billion pound investment is still hanging on the decision of former project partner E.ON.
Outgoing Head honcho Jeroen wagon der Curve admitted the company had endured some “technology baths” during the past when it backed unprofitable technologies. The Firm has forecast that by the year 2025, 80% of power will be sourced from normal fuels and 20 p.c. from other power sources such as the RV solar panel. Although, on alternative technologies, it is spending just over 1%.
Over the last 5 years, only $1.7bn of the $150bn it has invested has gone towards alternative energies like the RV solar panel. There was a minimum of only 1% of the budget invested by the company at one time, as Cook indicated, on natural gas in a liquefied state, that has now become a large portion of its business.
The company claimed it would raise debt levels to maintain dividend payments and its spending programme. Wagon der Curve claimed that energy needs over the long haul are healthy, and that oil prices would recover.

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